logo
Tudor signs new two-year deal with Juventus: club

Tudor signs new two-year deal with Juventus: club

The Sun14 hours ago

IGOR TUDOR has signed a new contract with Juventus which will keep the Croatian coach in Turin for another two seasons, the Serie A club said on Friday.
In a statement, Juve said that Tudor 'will lead the men's first team until 30 June, 2027, with an option to extend by another year until 30 June, 2028'.
Juve's new general manager Damien Comolli had already confirmed earlier this week that Tudor, 47, would stay on as coach after the club failed to snatch Antonio Conte from Serie A champions Napoli.
Juve had pushed to bring back club icon Conte, who won three straight league titles as coach of the Turin giants between 2011 and 2014.
But Conte decided to stay at Napoli and defend the Scudetto, leading Juve to decide to stick with Tudor who replaced sacked Thiago Motta in March and guided the club to next season's Champions League.
Tudor will lead Juve at the upcoming Club World Cup in the USA where the Italians face Al Ain, Wydad AC and Manchester City in the group stage.
Juve are one of a minority of Serie A clubs to stick with their coach, with a host of changes already made less than three weeks after the end of last season.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Boca Juniors defender Costa gets special US visa for Club World Cup following earlier rejection
Boca Juniors defender Costa gets special US visa for Club World Cup following earlier rejection

New Straits Times

time7 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Boca Juniors defender Costa gets special US visa for Club World Cup following earlier rejection

Buenos Aires: Boca Juniors defender Ayrton Costa will be able to take part in the Club World Cup in the United States following a u-turn by U.S. immigration officials who had previously rejected his visa application, the Argentine club said yesterday. "Ayrton Costa has been granted a 26-day special visa," a club spokesperson told Reuters. Costa's visa application was subject to a criminal complaint in his native Argentina, relating to an aggravated robbery in 2018, which he avoided trial for by accepting a probationary sentence in 2023. However, U.S. officials previously ruled that he could not enter the country as he was still serving his sentence. The press office at the U.S. embassy in Argentina told Reuters that they cannot discuss individual visa applications. Boca Juniors will open the tournament in Miami on Monday against Portuguese side Benfica.

Excessive financial demands scuppered pre-Club World Cup signings: Al-Hilal CEO
Excessive financial demands scuppered pre-Club World Cup signings: Al-Hilal CEO

New Straits Times

time7 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Excessive financial demands scuppered pre-Club World Cup signings: Al-Hilal CEO

RIYADH: Al-Hilal CEO Esteve Calzada said they were confident in their Club World Cup squad's strength despite failing to secure any big names in the tournament's build-up, adding that talks with several targets collapsed due to excessive financial demands. The Riyadh-based club, backed by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, parted ways with marquee signing Neymar earlier this year, but still boasts prominent players including Ruben Neves, Joao Cancelo, Aleksandar Mitrovic and Sergej Milinkovic-Savic. However, unlike Real Madrid who bolstered their squad with Trent Alexander-Arnold and Manchester City, who added Tijjani Reijnders and Rayan Cherki, Al-Hilal made no major European acquisitions during the tournament's designated transfer window. The club's most notable addition ahead of Wednesday's opening match against Real Madrid in Miami was Italian manager Simone Inzaghi, appointed earlier this month. "This is the first time we've faced this transfer window... It's been difficult for us to find our bearings, including finding the right coach (Inzaghi) who could take charge of the team for the tournament," Calzada told Spanish daily Marca in an interview published yesterday. "We operate with a budget that we have to meet, and it's true that sometimes some players or agents don't understand that... There's been a lot of activity, but in the end we haven't made any deals." Asked about the challenges they faced in the mini transfer window, given the club's reputation for big spending, the CEO said players were demanding too much money. "Firstly, because we have a lot of confidence in our team, and secondly, because the circumstances haven't been right, including the fact that some people have gone crazy with the fees they're asking for; they think we can reach any figure," he added. "Truly, what a player can earn in Saudi Arabia will always be much more than what they can earn in Europe. But clearly, we don't have unlimited resources, nor do we print money. "In fact, we've missed out on opportunities to sign players precisely because they believed money was inexhaustible, and we have to manage the club sustainably and on reasonable terms."

‘Suited and booted' immigration officials fuels anxiety at Club World Cup opener
‘Suited and booted' immigration officials fuels anxiety at Club World Cup opener

Malay Mail

time7 hours ago

  • Malay Mail

‘Suited and booted' immigration officials fuels anxiety at Club World Cup opener

NEW YORK, June 14 — US Customs and Border Protection has promised to be 'suited and booted' at the first round of Club World Cup football matches, as the curtain-raiser event for next year's World Cup kicks off amidst anxiety from some fans in the United States. The tournament starts in Miami today as football great Lionel Messi and his MLS team Inter Miami play Egypt's Al Ahly, as protests over US President Donald Trump's immigration policies continue across the country. 'CBP will be suited and booted, ready to provide security for the first round of games,' the department wrote in a widely reported social media post that added to some fans' concerns over attending the Club World Cup. The Department of Homeland Security did not respond to a request for comment over the now-deleted post. Tom Warrick, a former DHS deputy assistant secretary, told Reuters that while it is a normal practice for agencies like ICE and CBP to provide surge capacity security at major sporting events, the language from the post caused understandable alarm. 'I suspect it was just a moment of inattention before somebody cleared a message that someone else should have said, 'Oh, whoa, wait a minute, we need to change the messaging',' said Warrick, a non-resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council think tank. A view shows a patch of the US Customs and Border Protection on the uniform of an officer, outside the Edward R. Roybal Federal building, after days of protests against federal immigration sweeps and the deployment of the California National Guard and US Marines, in downtown Los Angeles, California June 10, 2025. — Reuters pic 'They may also need to change the security posture because very clearly, you know, uniformed officers or people in tactical gear are going to be looked at very differently, especially by a sporting event that is of such interest to people who come from countries that have citizens that have been the target of some of Trump's immigration enforcement measures.' Trump deployed the Marines in Los Angeles this week in response to civilians protesting against his immigration policies, as Immigration and Customs Enforcement ramps up raids to deliver on his promise of record-level deportations. California Governor Gavin Newsom and other Democratic leaders said the deployment was unnecessary, while Trump defended his decision, saying the city would be in flames if he had not done so. Protests so far have been mostly peaceful. 'I'm scared because things have got ugly. But let's hope that things calm down a bit and let us enjoy the games,' said bricklayer Tono, who was originally from Monterrey, in northern Mexico, and now works in Los Angeles. The 25-year-old, who has been in the United States for five years and declined to share his last name, said he and his friends had tickets to see Liga MX side Monterrey, who play all three of their group-stage matches at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. 'If things get uglier, we'll talk about it, after all we have time to decide,' he said. The Club World Cup will see 32 teams competing in 12 stadiums across the United States, after world football's governing body Fifa expanded the format in a billion-dollar gamble to revolutionise the club game. The tournament is a curtain-raiser for the 2026 World Cup, as organisers try to fan enthusiasm for the quadrennial global spectacle in the football-ambivalent US, which is co-hosting next year's finals with neighbours Canada and Mexico. Jorge Loweree, managing director at US advocacy group American Immigration Council, said that football owes some of its growing popularity in the US to immigrants. 'It's reasonable to expect that lots and lots of folks that just want to attend these events are either immigrants themselves here permanently, temporarily — even folks that may be undocumented,' he told Reuters. 'It's perfectly reasonable to be scared. We haven't seen large-scale immigration enforcement actions at sporting events like this historically, but this is also a moment that is not like any other moment in history in the US.' — Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store